Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ had been written by T. S. Eliot, though, back in 1910-11, and made its debut in print in June 1915, when it was published in Poetry magazine. Previously, one poetry bookseller had rejected the poem on the grounds that it was ‘absolutely insane’: Harold Monro, an influential publisher and owner of ...

    • Love
    • Death
    • Religion/Spirituality
    • Nature
    • Beauty
    • Aging
    • Desire
    • Identity/Self
    • Travel/Journeys
    • Apocalypse

    Love is the most obvious. It can be love for another person, love for nature, or even love for oneself. The first on this list is the most obvious. Love for another can be seen within the work of countless poets since writing as a form of expression came into being. One writer who is known for crafting some of the most beautiful and memorable love ...

    Just like love, death is a very common theme in poetry. In Edgar Allan Poe‘s ‘Lenore’, Poe combines the two. In this piece, a lover and a bystander discuss the life and death of a woman, Lenore. The lover berates the public for not appreciating her adequately and tries to express how important she was to him. Here is the last stanzaof the poem that...

    The third theme we’re going to take a look at is religion or spirituality.Just like in the world of visual art, some of the more important written art was done while the writer was considering religion, faith, God, and oftentimes, doubt. These themes often come together into the contemplation of the afterlife, a higher power, and the forces that co...

    Nature is undoubtedly one of the most commonly utilized themes of poetry in recorded history. It is due to nature’s wide-ranging connotationsand the impossibility of perfectly defining it that makes it such an allusive and engaging theme. Poems in this category could speak on the natural world (as we commonly think of it: trees, mountains, etc) and...

    Another wide-ranging and multitudinous theme is beauty. It comes in many forms and can be seen through natural beauty, physical human beauty, beauty in spirit or action, as well as an assortment of other instances. Often, poems dedicated to human beauty come in the form of odes, such as ‘Ode to Beauty’ by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Or, like ‘She Walks in...

    The most powerful literary themes are those which touch everyone. Life, death, and age are examples of universal considerations that each person, lover of poetry or not, must contend with. Some of the most powerful poetic works consider age, and one’s unstoppable progression towards death. That being said, no one’s experience of aging is the same a...

    Speaking of universally relatable themes, desire is undoubtedly an important one. Whether romantic, erotic, or spiritual, desire poems are expansive. Shakespeare’s sonnets to the Fair Youth come to mind. The speaker in these works addresses a young man through a series of sonnets that outline his love, desire, and heartache. Some of the most famous...

    Writings about oneself, especially in a poetic form, were most popular in the 18th and 19th centuries. Although, that is not to say that they don’t exist in today’s contemporary literary world. These writers, no matter what time period they lived in, deeply considered their own place in the world, the impact (or lack thereof) they thought they were...

    When one considers this wide-ranging theme, there are many possible subjects to keep in mind. A journey can consist of just about anything. One could be moving physically traveling from place to place, or be transforming in some significant way. The journey might be somewhere specific that can actually be listed on a map, or somewhere less tangible...

    Throughout time, writers and non-writers have interpreted the end of the world, in startlingly different ways. Some see a violent, bloody end to the human race. Others, something simpler, calmer, and even to be looked forward to. No matter the writer’s religious or cultural background, apocalyptically themed poems can be stimulating and disturbing....

  2. Apr 30, 2019 · Upon the Theme of Love. 1. O love, how thou art tired out with rhyme! Thou art a tree whereon all poets climb, And from thy tender branches everyone 2. Doth take some 3 fruit, which fancy feeds upon. But now thy tree is left so bare and poor, 5. That they can hardly gather one plum more.

  3. Summary. ‘Love’ by Eavan Boland is an image-rich poem that speaks on the highs and lows of love and how past emotions cannot be recreated. The poem begins with several images of a small, simple town. These are contrasted with those of a hero entering into death. The speaker directs her words to her partner, telling this person about their ...

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  4. Let’s take a closer look at some of the most prominent themes of the ‘summer’s day’ sonnet, Sonnet 18. Beauty. Although it’s often viewed as a love poem, Sonnet 18 is more than a traditional romantic poem. Shakespeare praises the Fair Youth’s beauty as ‘more lovely’ than the beauty of a summer’s day, before going on to list ...

  5. Key themes. Romantic love. A good number of the poems on the Love and Relationships cluster explore romantic relationships. Many also explore the complexity of love and relationships. The romantic love explored includes: Unrequited love: longing for a love that cannot be, or a love that is not returned. Marriage: both happy and unhappy unions

  6. People also ask

  7. Love’s Philosophy, written by the Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley in 1820, conveys typical Romantic themes relating to the power of the natural world and intense emotion, in this case, unrequited love. In the poem, Shelley’s speaker shows the complex nature of relationships as he tries to seduce a potential lover.

  1. People also search for